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JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipant
Something tells you dreamt of being a pro wrestler
JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantThis is from Reverend William Barber
August 15, 2020 at 12:53 pm in reply to: Trump admits (today) that he’s trying to sabotage vote-by-mail. #119353JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipant“A man who stands for nothing will fall for anything.”
— Malcolm X- This reply was modified 4 years, 3 months ago by JackPMiller.
JackPMillerParticipantStill I Rise
by Maya AngelouYou may write me down in history
With your bitter, twisted lies,
You may trod me in the very dirt
But still, like dust, I’ll rise.Does my sassiness upset you?
Why are you beset with gloom?
‘Cause I walk like I’ve got oil wells
Pumping in my living room.Just like moons and like suns,
With the certainty of tides,
Just like hopes springing high,
Still I’ll rise.Did you want to see me broken?
Bowed head and lowered eyes?
Shoulders falling down like teardrops.Weakened by my soulful cries.
Does my haughtiness offend you?
Don’t you take it awful hard
‘Cause I laugh like I’ve got gold mines
Diggin’ in my own back yard.You may shoot me with your words,
You may cut me with your eyes,
You may kill me with your hatefulness,
But still, like air, I’ll rise.Does my sexiness upset you?
Does it come as a surprise
That I dance like I’ve got diamonds
At the meeting of my thighs?Out of the huts of history’s shame
I rise
Up from a past that’s rooted in pain
I rise
I’m a black ocean, leaping and wide,
Welling and swelling I bear in the tide.Leaving behind nights of terror and fear
I rise
Into a daybreak that’s wondrously clear
I rise
Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,
I am the dream and the hope of the slave.I rise
I rise
I rise.JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantI’d advise you to watch you all 43 minutes
August 13, 2020 at 9:55 pm in reply to: Trump admits (today) that he’s trying to sabotage vote-by-mail. #119242JackPMillerParticipantPostal workers’ union says up to 80,000 letters were held back Monday in southern Maine
August 11, 2020Customers across southern Maine will be waiting on as many as 80,000 pieces of mail that will arrive late because of new U.S. Postal Service policies, the president of a local postal workers’ union said.
Rather than wait an extra 10 minutes for the mail to be ready, the trucks left the postal service’s Southern Maine Processing and Distribution Center in Scarborough exactly on time Monday morning, leaving behind roughly 80,400 letters that will be delivered late as a result, said Scott Adams, general president of the American Postal Workers Union Local 458. He estimated the processing center sorts approximately one million pieces of mail on a typical Sunday night.
Adams sent the Portland Press Herald information Monday morning outlining the amount of delayed mail broken down by destination. He said all the letters left behind had been sorted the previous night and just needed to be loaded onto mail carriers’ trucks for delivery.
A postal service spokesman said Monday evening that the union’s 80,000 figure was overblown. He also said the delayed letters were distributed later in the day and were not held until Tuesday.
August 13, 2020 at 2:45 pm in reply to: Trump admits (today) that he’s trying to sabotage vote-by-mail. #119229JackPMillerParticipantNot a shock. He says that he is willing to cheat out loud, & the Republicans in Congress won’t do nothing. He does not know, it will affect senior citizens medications, plus bills getting there on time as well. Of course Trump does not care as long as he can stay in power, by any means necessary.
JackPMillerParticipantlink https://hillreporter.com/karine-jean-pierre-named-as-chief-of-staff-to-kamala-harris-75795
Karine Jean-Pierre Named As Chief Of Staff to Kamala Harris
BY Tara Dublin August 12, 2020When future generations look back at 2020, one of the few highlights will be August 11th, the day two black women made political history. Kamala Harris was named by Joe Biden as his running mate, and it was announced that her Chief of Staff will be campaign organizer and commentator Karine Jean-Pierre, making her the first black woman to hold the position. Harris’s nomination is also significant as a graduate of Howard University, making her the first nominee to have been educated at an HBCU (Historical Black Colleges and Universities) where she was a member of the prestigious Alpha Kappa Alpha, the oldest black sorority in the country.
Jean-Pierre, who famously defended Harris when a protester rushed the stage during a MoveOn event and took the microphone from the then-Presidential candidate, was actually revealed as a member of the new team even before Harris was announced. She quote-tweeted an announcement from Mike Memoli, cheekily adding the “ambitious” as GOP criticisms of Harris have already begun to roll in.
Karine “ambitious” Jean-Pierre is incredibly proud to be working to elect the Biden/Harris ticket. Let’s go!! https://t.co/Y3rNNz6qJG
— Karine Jean-Pierre (@K_JeanPierre) August 11, 2020
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 01: Karine Jean-Pierre and Kamala Harris speak
onstage at the MoveOn Big Ideas Forum at The Warfield Theatre on June 01, 2019 in
San Francisco, California. (Photo by Kimberly White/Getty Images for MoveOn)Jean-Pierre, who was raised in Haiti, was the southeast regional political director for the Obama for America campaign. During Barack Obama’s first term, she served as the regional political director for the White House Office of Political Affairs. Jean-Pierre served as the deputy campaign manager for Martin O’Malley’s brief Presidential run. She has also been a frequent contributor on MSNBC.
JackPMillerParticipantIt was sad, hearing the Conservatives are upset about these two women making a sexual song. I heard even some guy named Ben Shapiro read the lyrics. Wow. It is a song. Sex has been in music for a long time. They get upset with this. Jeesh
JackPMillerParticipantWhy Conservatives Like Ben Shapiro Are Triggered by Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion’s ‘WAP’
The Daily Wire pundit’s blown a gasket over the hip-hop anthem. It’s because “fear and fury toward Black female sexuality is commonplace, and has been,” writes Cassie da Costa.
By Cassie da Costa Entertainment Writer
Updated Aug. 11, 2020 10:56AM/ Published Aug. 10, 2020 11:39PM ETIt’s clear enough that Ben Shapiro and Republican candidate James P. Bradley’s puritanical pearl-clutching over Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion’s (censored!) music video “WAP,” which stands for Wet-Ass Pussy, is largely irrelevant.
Shapiro’s and Bradley’s statements decrying the explicit message of the song and the (un)dress in the video constitute the kind of performative moral panics that are so baldly opportunistic as to render them banal. (Though, aside from his ranty and tedious video, Shapiro’s tweets express a bizarre curiosity about the rappers’ vaginal health in which he solicits input from his “doctor wife”.) Yet, here I am writing about them because it is now a central function of being a public conservative scold to swerve boldly out of your lane and perhaps onto an entirely different highway, in another country. These hysterical men have made lascivious rap their business by cosplaying as responsible parents, framing their repulsion as dignity and concern. (Bradley exclaimed on Twitter that the song made him “pour holy water in my ears and I feel sorry for future girls if this is their role model!”) So, the moment has arrived at which we must reckon with the not-so-slick game potential conservative lawmakers and self-righteous “dark web” lecturers are playing by supplying us with their Wet-Ass Pussy takes.
In a tweet this evening, Cardi wrote, “I can’t believe conservatives soo mad about WAP.” It’s almost unbelievable except that, across the political spectrum, fear and fury toward Black female sexuality is commonplace, and has been.
It’s almost unbelievable except that, across the political spectrum, fear and fury toward Black female sexuality is commonplace, and has been.
As long as the U.S. has existed, white supremacy has labeled Black women hypersexual and untrustworthy—and thus, bad mothers—and from those stereotypes, respectability sprung forth (in fact, these characterizations were usually imported from Europe). During slavery and after emancipation, many free and then middle-class Black people, in particular, carried on with polite and modest comportment so as not to—they hoped—fall victim to racist distortions. Black women, specifically, saw themselves monitored not only by the white gaze but by Black men—and even other Black women, too. The advent of hip hop, and women carving a place for themselves as musicians and performers within the tradition, saw a mainstream repudiation of Black female respectability. Lil’ Kim, Foxy Brown, Remy Ma, and others came on the scene with salacious lyrics and revealing outfits; Missy Elliott rhymed frankly and facetiously about sex. These women sprung from a legacy of clever lyrical impropriety in Black female expression—Ma Rainey was known for her sharp tongue and even Ella Fitzgerald had her moments.
Many of these Black woman rappers also grew up working class or poor. The postures of respectability were certainly not unheard of in their communities—from Portsmouth, Virginia, to Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn—yet the creative imagination of these places often lived in gray areas between public and private, spaces harder to monitor in that they demanded inventiveness in their own ways: the church, the streets, the schoolyard, and yes, the bedroom. Men have been rapping, crooning, and belting about their sexual exploits from time immemorial, yet when women reclaim a space in this much-publicized arena, the same old scripts emerge. For Black women, this double standard is not merely the residue of the U.S.’s puritanical roots, but of the way in which racist assumptions about—and systemic devaluation of—Black women makes them always already too little and too much.
In 2014, Nicki Minaj’s “Anaconda” elicited plenty of overwrought commentary about Black female sexuality, riling up the cultural conversation around fat asses. Al Roker, for example, was disgusted by the music video, but generally, Minaj received more thoughtful engagement with her irreverent audacity. Mostly the same goes for “WAP,” a spectacle that, while not at all groundbreaking, is lyrically astute and visually multi-dimensional. The video itself recalls the work of Elliott, Minaj, and Lil’ Kim, as well as pop stars like Lady Gaga and Madonna, whose whiteness has often seen their artistry emphasized over their sensuality. In fact, that Republicans are loudly condemning the video only means that many more people will watch it, just as they “accidentally” did themselves. Megan and Cardi know this, and have taken all hand-wringing in stride, carrying on with the kind of self-confidence that a politics of respectability cannot supply and “future girls” would do well to take note of.
- This reply was modified 4 years, 3 months ago by JackPMiller.
- This reply was modified 4 years, 3 months ago by JackPMiller.
JackPMillerParticipantThe Big Ten, & Pac-12 have decided to cancel their seasons, but if the other schools cancel their seasons, how will it affect the draft? How will we know those guys that were going to get their chance this year, won’t because of the pandemic show who they are, and move up in the draft? I’m so confused.
JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantI think he is hibernating until the Coronavirus is over, and Trump is out of office, or there is world domination of kittens. Something like that
JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantHopefully Snead is working on a contract with Reynolds as well.
I doubt it, Jack. They can only pay so many guys. At most 2 or 3. I wouldn’t think Reynolds would be on that list (and ahead of him are Ramsey, Kupp, and Johnson…if they keep Johnson).
I’m looking at Robert Woods being traded at the end of the season. It is not going to be a deep draft at WR. We could get a late first round pick for him, meaning if lucky, one of the top CBs could drop to us.
JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantHopefully Snead is working on a contract with Reynolds as well.
JackPMillerParticipantBrewer opting out is a good thing
Jack did you mean NOT a good thing?
(Dropping “not” is a common typo on the net.)
Let me know. If it is an error I will fix it.
I was talking about our Top Rookie LB has COVID, that is not a good thing. How many players will get COVID during the season? If we only gave up one first round pick, which was the 2020 first rounder, but not 2021 for Ramsey, then, I would hope most of our guys would stay home, and tank the season. That would have been to get a CB like Caleb Farley or Patrick Surtain on the opposite side of Ramsey. Since we don’t have our 2021 first rounder, then it is not worth it. Brewer is understandable. Lewis is our top rookie Edge guy, and getting COVID is scary. Then as I posted who else is going to get the virus? Goff? Kupp? Donald? Ramsey? McVay? Are we prepared for the worst, if it happens? This COVID is going nowhere anytime soon.
JackPMillerParticipantIf we had our 2021 1st Round pick, I would be hoping that our top guys would be opting out. Guys like Brockers, Donald, Goff, Kupp, and so on. I would have said, the hell with the season. COVID, and tank to get a really good CB like Caleb Farley or Patrick Surtain to play opposite of Ramsey.
JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantBrewer opting out is a good thing, and now our top rookie LB has COVID. At least it sounds like it. Does not look good. Ugh.
JackPMillerParticipantJackPMillerParticipantSafeties could be real good. CBs, not so much, after Jalen Ramsey.
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